Pure FlashArray X NVMe offers superior performance, ease of use, low latency, and efficient data reduction. Users appreciate its intuitive interface, excellent support, proactive issue monitoring, seamless upgrades, and reliability. Notable features include high compression rates, predictive analytics, robust DDoS protection, and SafeMode. It excels in scalability and provides smooth failover, high availability, and quick cloning of environments. The platform also boasts user-friendly setup, strong diagnostics, and comprehensive reporting tools. Pure Storage's NVMe technology stands out for its speed, security, and performance enhancements.
- "I use the tool for Oracle databases, Oracle virtual machines, and Oracle Linux databases. I'm on the storage side, not a database administrator."
- "The solution uses newer technology for deduplication and compression."
- "The tool's valuable features are speed, security, data compression, and reliability. Its data compression feature is the best that we have ever seen. It helps us to save money and resources."
Pure FlashArray X NVMe needs interface, reporting, and dashboard improvements. Users seek better replication, multi-tenant functions, and backup integration. Enhance direct network access and tagging details for LUNs. Efficiency and data deduplication rates should be addressed. Expansion into the SMB market, AI-based threat detection, and increased pricing competitiveness are suggested. More support for enterprise backup systems like Rubrik and Veeam is desired. Transparent failover, better technical support access, and additional language support could enhance user experience.
- "Managing data isn't difficult for me. The performance is usually perfect, but we sometimes have capacity problems."
- "I would like to see some AI features that would allow arrays to intelligently identify threats or unusual behavior in the data pattern and give an alert."
- "One point I'd like to improve is that the tool should start selling small boxes again. It discontinued some products and is focusing on bigger, more capable boxes, neglecting the SMB market. Even though it's not a big market, it shouldn't have removed them."